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The Sequoia Project is offering guidance on information blocking in advance of expected final rules from the government on the topic.February 9
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Seven stakeholder organizations sent a letter to House and Senate committee leaders urging them to ensure that the goals of the Cures Act are met.September 24
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The Federal Trade Commission has weighed in regarding a proposed rule on information blocking from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT.June 7
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The rules should be rescinded and the agencies should ‘go back to the drawing board,’ says Joel White of the Health Innovation Alliance.May 31
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Vendor group has concerns about timelines, ambiguous language, disincentives for innovation and information blocking definitions.May 30
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Hearing before the Senate health committee aims to ‘ensure these rules will make the problem of information blocking better, not worse,’ says Sen. Lamar Alexander.March 27
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The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology has a lot on its plate in Fiscal Year 2020, but the agency may have to do more with less.March 12
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The agency describes 7 exceptions for sharing provisions, but promises to enable the free flow of health information.February 19
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Guidance would enable enforcement of information access for patients and provide more pressure on providers to achieve interoperability.February 12
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Health IT Now says agency allowed 90-day review period to expire without publication of proposed rule.December 19